Marko Rodin - Smart Lazer Technology

With one or two meaningless exceptions like mole rats, every other land mammal besides man has a fur coat. The fur coat is a first defense against the elements and also against all of the hard and sharp things which animals bump into, so that for any normal land mammal, there is no possible advantage to losing a fur coat.

But to a creature which handles fire?? An incident which would cause a minor burn to a human would light a Neanderthal or other ape up like a torch and fry him.

Quoting: observation

did we ever possess an entire fur coatour history as we see it says no

With one or two meaningless exceptions like mole rats, every other land mammal besides man has a fur coat. The fur coat is a first defense against the elements and also against all of the hard and sharp things which animals bump into, so that for any normal land mammal, there is no possible advantage to losing a fur coat.

But to a creature which handles fire?? An incident which would cause a minor burn to a human would light a Neanderthal or other ape up like a torch and fry him.

Quoting: observation

did we ever possess an entire fur coatour history as we see it says no

Quoting: aether

I don't know how many pages back, but I posted what the chinese tao think or at least some sect of them does. Is that we came from the ocean. Like the watery womb.

Moths are much more beautiful than butterflies, butterflies get all the attention. Moths spin silk, are stronger, faster.

See this little whole in the cocoon? This moth is just about to emerge. It in there struggling, its digging its way through the thick hide of the cocoon. He could help it and take his knife and gently widen the opening and it would be free, but it would be too weak to survive. Struggle is natures way of strengthening.

We cannot say that we are not what we once were, except in that we do not identify as we once did.

Should we choose to identify, as it were, we would be as we once were, but in a new moment of being--the essence of evolution................

Quoting: second p

that word is the fuck uphow and why things alter is a key effect of the 2 causes singular effect (synergy)until we get our heads around that nothing can or will make sense

Quoting: aether

The word can be confusing, yes. What we have been taught to associate with the process of evolution is far from the actual reality of the process itself.

If we think of it in microcosmic terms, it makes it easier to apply in scalar fashion. A cell is a sentient being with a nervous system (the membrane). However, the organ and it's higher collective nervous system composed of many cells, takes precedent over the instructions of any one individual cell's needs or instructions from it's "brain".

This means that together, cells will function more efficiently for specialization. But even the organ is subject to a higher nervous system which belongs to the sentient organism (a collective of organs)as a human. And that organism is constantly interacting through and with it's environment, overriding the instructions of individual organs, cells, etc. as a process of adaptation. This scalar hierarchy of consciousness interaction within the environment determines the evolutionary culmination of data on all levels, as evolution is nothing but cyclic change being manifest in any new moment, with it's new challenges and variables, etc.-- it is how adaptation is ENSURED. This is why nothing ever remains the same in the universe, and everything is in constant flux.

We are not the same as our ancestors because we live in a new time, a new moment with new challenges. Blooming. However, we are a cumulative product of ALL of their evolutionary history. This is why it is much more personal than it is "alien." And it is scalar in terms of consciousness unfolding out from the subconscious--as individuals and as a collective. Nothing separates us from the dead.

When I say that the dead are amongst the living, I mean it literally and figuratively.

Some would have us believe that "aliens" bestowed upon humanity everything that we know. I think we learned it for ourselves by studying the scalar patterning of nature in context with ourselves.

Any information or data is a new tool for the next moment of the evolutionary process. And I'm not talking about Darwin's brand of evolution.

Indigenous cultures all have something in common--reverence for the ancestral dead. Patriarchal religions have something in common too--they encourage us to mourn and forget our ancestral connections. In the meantime, those who developed the Westernized patriarchal religions, STAY in communion with their own ancestors (among other things), while we languish in forgetting and mourning our human past.

But what about us and all of our dead? What could be so powerful about death that it was deemed necessary by TPTB to disconnect us from history, our families, our commonality, and our evolutionary process as it unfolded for humanity throughout generations?

If history is written by the conquerors, then who can really tell the true version of events except those who lived to experience them? The nature of the universe is such that no memory can be lost--we may fail to retrieve it upon will, but EVERY memory of EVERY person who EVER lived is there, including it's associated emotion.

Have we lost our identity? Or is it just "foreign" and "alien" because we cannot recall at will? If the information is THERE to be recalled in the vast storehouse of the universe, and we are in holographic nature, a tiny piece of the whole capable of replicating the entirety of the original-- then what have they been teaching us to forget if not our very own identity (replicating the patterning of unfolding nature)?

If we know who we are, then we know what we are capable of doing, being, expressing, fulfilling--we are empowered. When we begin to involve ourselves on a scalar level and recall our own evolutionary process--we will be cooking with gas.

Well ours is different...they have fur we have skin...both burn with fire...but internaly, we are not much different...anatomy...well some are but then you get into evolved species...that have to know their origins to determine the rate at which they evolved... a beginning point of origin

so what have we got towe have gotten into our golden age and that feels "alien" (sorry second p}we have got to where that age ends and where thought forms begin , it seems, and our customs that began design of thought within shape

yes

slowly we are getting a picture

Quoting: aether

but we must remembersecond p is correctit is all uswe may have received visitorsdon`t know yetbut it is all our history and kiss and cuddle our ancestors cos they love us andw/f is rightwithout usthey have nothing

Quoting: aether

and i believe they don`t deserve nothingthey are proud of usthat is for sure

Quoting: aether

Without them, we had become nothing.

It propels us. None of that energy is lost, ever. So what is it doing?

I don't know how many pages back, but I posted what the chinese tao think or at least some sect of them does. Is that we came from the ocean. Like the watery womb.

Quoting: ac

Since an electric star is heated externally a planet need not be destroyed by orbiting beneath its anode glow. In fact life is not only possible inside the glow of a small brown dwarf, it seems far more likely than on a planet orbiting outside a star! This is because the radiant energy arriving on a planet orbiting inside a glowing sphere is evenly distributed over the entire surface of the planet.

There are no seasons, no tropics and no ice-caps. A planet does not have to rotate, its axis can point in any direction and its orbit can be eccentric. The radiant energy received by the planet will be strongest at the blue and red ends of the spectrum. Photosynthesis relies on red light. Sky light would be a pale purple (the classical "purple dawn of creation"). L-type Brown Dwarfs have water as a dominant molecule in their spectra, along with many other biologically important molecules and elements. Its "children" would accumulate atmospheres and water would mist down.

where is memoryin the fieldwhere is our original memoryin earths field of origin , it`s gravity field within our magnetospherewhat governs the field of earths gravity within our magnetospherethe suns heliosphere field structurewhat governs our suns heliosphere field structureour galactic field structurewhat governs our galactic field structurethe field structure that is outside of our galaxieswhat is the field structure outside of our galaxiesthe structure the two forces of singular effect function most like themselves within (without additional structure but that of their own)

He is going to be restoring a structure...is that not funny...I can't even look them up cause my pc won't let me atm...another broadband disconnect...I wonder what I will find about this tribe...what piece it will bring of understanding yet more? See how that works

.........The river is named for the Ouachita tribe, one of several historic tribes who lived along it. Others included the Caddo, Osage Nation, Tensa, Chickasaw, and Choctaw. Washita is an Indian word meaning "good hunting grounds" and "sparkling silver water."

Before the rise of the historic tribes, their indigenous ancestors lived along the river for thousands of years. In the Lower Mississippi Valley, they began building monumental earthwork mounds in the Middle Archaic period (6000-2000 BCE in Louisiana). .

"Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body,but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, "Wow! What a Ride!"

"Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body,but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, "Wow! What a Ride!"

Wichita legends tell us that the history of their people forms a cycle. With the world's creation, the gifts of corn and the bow and arrow were bestowed upon the people by the spirits of the first man and woman, Morning Star and the Moon. The cycle is complete with the days of darkness, when the earth becomes barren. Just as disaster seems eminent, the cycle begins again and the world is renewed through the new creation.

the morning star is sol, our new to us sun (sol)our original memory stories of over 8000 years back from this time have been corrupted by error and design because of error consistently since thenhappily our discoveries of our past recent years (60 yrs. or so) rectify that in practice hence our memories speak to awareness of reality, once more

the morning star is sol, our new to us sun (sol)our original memory stories of over 8000 years back from this time have been corrupted by error and design because of error consistently since thenhappily our discoveries of our past recent years (60 yrs. or so) rectify that in practice hence our memories speak to awareness of reality, once more

Quoting: aether

morning star is called morning star because with their arrival we experienced our first morningwe never had until his arrivaland upon his arrival luna lite up in radiance as never before, she shone upon his arrivalthus began our what is called days and nights with luna and morning star radiant in their love of each and us

This purple dawn period would have produced an environment of perpetual twilight, with uniform global temperatures producing virtually no wind and there being a complete inability to calculate time. All continents, including Antarctica, would have supported the continual growth of fantastically elongated and splayed reddish vegetation in tropical abundance. Adapted through its red colouring to absorbing Saturn’s radiated energy rather than its light, Earth’s vegetation would have enjoyed a complete absence of seasons and this would have contributed to a densely rich atmosphere able to supprt the flight of giant insects that we know once existed.